Theories_of_Personality 7th Ed Feist

(Claudeth Gamiao) #1
Feist−Feist: Theories of
Personality, Seventh
Edition

II. Psychodynamic
Theories


  1. Freud: Psychoanalysis © The McGraw−Hill^49
    Companies, 2009


of penis envyis a powerful force in the formation of girls’ personality. Unlike cas-
tration anxiety in boys, which is quickly repressed, penis envy may last for years in
one form or another. Freud (1933/1964) believed that penis envy is often expressed
as a wish to be a boy or a desire to have a man. Almost universally, it is carried over
into a wish to have a baby, and eventually it may find expression in the act of giving
birth to a baby, especially a boy.
Preceding the castration complex, a girl establishes an identification with her
mother similar to that developed by a boy; that is, she fantasizes being seduced by
her mother. These incestuous feelings, according to Freud (1933/1964), are later
turned into hostility when the girl holds her mother responsible for bringing her into
the world without a penis. Her libido is then turned toward her father, who can sat-
isfy her wish for a penis by giving her a baby, an object that to her has become a sub-
stitute for the phallus. The desire for sexual intercourse with the father and accom-
panying feelings of hostility for the mother are known as the simple female Oedipus
complex.Incidentally, Freud (1920/1955b, 1931/1961) objected to the term Electra
complex,sometimes used by others when referring to the female Oedipus complex,
because it suggests a direct parallel between male and female development during
the phallic stage. Freud believed that no such parallel exists and that differences in
anatomy determine different courses in male and female sexual development after
the phallic stage.
Not all girls, however, transfer their sexual interest onto their father and de-
velop hostility toward their mother. Freud (1931/1961, 1933/1964) suggested that
when pre-Oedipal girls acknowledge their castration and recognize their inferiority
to boys, they will rebel in one of three ways. First, they may give up their sexuality—
both the feminine and the masculine dispositions—and develop an intense hostility
toward their mother; second, they may cling defiantly to their masculinity, hoping for
a penis and fantasizing being a man; and third, they may develop normally: that is,
they may take their father as a sexual choice and undergo the simple Oedipus com-
plex. A girl’s choice is influenced in part by her inherent bisexuality and the degree
of masculinity she developed during the pre-Oedipal period.
The simple female Oedipus complex is resolved when a girl gives up mastur-
batory activity, surrenders her sexual desire for her father, and identifies once again
with her mother. However, the female Oedipus complex is usually broken up more
slowly and less completely than is the male’s. Because the superego is built from the
relics of the shattered Oedipus complex, Freud (1924/1961, 1933/1964) believed that
the girl’s superego is usually weaker, more flexible, and less severe than the boy’s.
The reason the girl’s superego is not as strict as the boy’s is traceable to the differ-
ence between the sexes during their Oedipal histories. For boys, castration anxiety
follows the Oedipus complex, breaks it up nearly completely, and renders unneces-
sary the continued expenditure of psychic energy on its remnants. Once the Oedipus
complex is shattered, energy used to maintain it is free to establish a superego. For
girls, however, the Oedipus complex followsthe castration complex (penis envy),
and because girls do not experience a threat of castration, they experience no trau-
matic sudden shock. The female Oedipus complex is only incompletely resolved by
the girl’s gradual realization that she may lose the love of her mother and that sexual
intercourse with her father is not forthcoming. Her libido thus remains partially ex-
pended to maintain the castration complex and its relics, thereby blocking some


Chapter 2 Freud: Psychoanalysis 43
Free download pdf